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Federal case Meaning in English

expression

ˈfɛdɝəɫ/, /ˈfɛdɹəɫ/ /ˈkeɪs
FED-er-uhl KAYS
fˈɛdəɹəl/ /kˈeɪs
FED-er-uhl KAYS

释义

A legal case handled by a federal court, or (informal) a situation that someone treats as more serious or important than it really is.

用法与细微差别

Used formally in legal contexts and informally to criticize someone for overreacting. The idiom 'make a federal case out of (something)' is common in American English and means to exaggerate the importance of something minor.

例句

The lawyer will take the federal case to court next week.

basic

Don't make a federal case out of a small mistake.

basic

The news reported a major federal case about fraud.

basic

Come on, it’s not a federal case—just relax.

natural

Why do you always turn everything into a federal case?

natural

He made a federal case out of being late five minutes.

natural